Fencer
Pro Bowl Player
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Ron Brace was drafted as a backup nose tackle and replacement for Wilfork if they couldent resign him. he has been playing in warrens position and backing up NT a bit to rest wilfork.
i dont think he has the prototypical size or quickness the patriots are looking for at the 5, so anyone they bring in who does fit the mold would immediately have the edge over brace (or anyone else currently on the roster for that matter).
Assume Warren comes back healthy enough to be a good starter. Then he and Wilfork have two of the starting DL roles. Anybody else who wants to start has to beat out a bunch of other guys, including Ron Brace.
So how will Heyward be better than Brace? And vice-versa?
I don't know which would be better and why. i would rather find out than to simply rely on Brace, and hope.
I would fine if Brace beat out Heyward for reps. Competition would be a good thing.
Warren/Stroud, Wilfork, Brace/Heyward
Wright, Pryor, Love
Any of the 4 DEs mocked to the patriots would work well in their system, it really comes down to which one the patriots like the best/value.
you might be able to get Jordan or Watt at 17, you might be able to get Wilkerson or Heyward at 28.
As far as heyward vs. Brace, besides the huge athleticism gap I think heyward has a much higher ceiling in this D. Brace is a run stopper where as heyward is also a run stopper than could evolve into a threat against the pass as well.
Of the 4 horseman I think the best run stoppers are heyward and Wilkerson. In my mind BB will 1st look to that quality and then to pass rush ability. Cam Jordan is not better against the run than either of those guys and neither is watt. Which could make them liabilities in the base. Between watt and Jordan give me watt. And between heyward/Wilkerson give me heyward. I don't see Wilkerson as being anything other than a run stopper. Heyward and watt have the highest ceiling of these four guys.
Based on potential, Heyward appears to have more talent then Brace. You perhaps could argue that these players have some similarities, Brace was a wide body getting by on size and talent who needed a full year of the Vince Wilfork Motivational Backside Kicking Academy to move beyond warm body and begin life as a football player. Heyward, from much of what I saw this season, was inconsistent, and only played to his potential in his bowl game when the sent of NFL cash was strongest. If NE thought another underachieving early second DL around Brace's #40 pick was a good candidate for the VWMBK Academy, I'm okay with the value range and the player targeted there. I don't see the guy anywhere in #17-#33 range for NE.Assume Warren comes back healthy enough to be a good starter. Then he and Wilfork have two of the starting DL roles. Anybody else who wants to start has to beat out a bunch of other guys, including Ron Brace.
So how will Heyward be better than Brace? And vice-versa?
Based on potential, Heyward appears to have more talent then Brace. You perhaps could argue that these players have some similarities, Brace was a wide body getting by on size and talent who needed a full year of the Vince Wilfork Motivational Backside Kicking Academy to move beyond warm body and begin life as a football player. Heyward, from much of what I saw this season, was inconsistent, and only played to his potential in his bowl game when the sent of NFL cash was strongest. If NE thought another underachieving early second DL around Brace's #40 pick was a good candidate for the VWMBK Academy, I'm okay with the value range and the player targeted there. I don't see the guy anywhere in #17-#33 range for NE.
As for those claiming Brace was drafted to be a reserve NT, please quote BB and link to his quote to substantiate your claim. If we go back to reports on Brace from his rookie Training Camp, we have keen observers such as Patsfanken reporting Brace drilling at defensive end more often by far then NT. You may wish to argue this was cross-training, yet the miracle of our television screen often shows Brace at DE, and rarely at NT. I submit Brace was drafted to play on the D-line, with no predisposition to force him into NT or DE or 3-tech or 1-shade.
I'm a trickster a heart, when I'm not meditating on the beauty of the cardboard containing my illustrious mental capacity. In this case your "surmise" is no more or less then my own at the time, and for the same reasons. I merely point to fresher evidence from observers at TC and my own TV to suggest our paradigm is once again being Belichicked (for lack of a more applicable term). It's a good thing I like sly, eccentric head coaches.Heh. This is a trick, right? Has BB ever actually stated publicly,"Well, we drafted this guy specifically for such-and-such position"??
Admittedly (at least on my part), it's a surmise based, however thinly, on Brace's body type compared to the body types of guys BB has drafted in the past who ended up playing primarily at 30-front DE (which is also a pretty small sample size). It also seems to me that those guys worked for some time at DT while developing for their eventual DE role, so, such "cross-training" wouldn't be unusual. And Brace has also spent some time as the second DT in 40-fronts and, frankly, he looked most comfortable and productive in that role.
But, still, the fact that Brace has spent so many game snaps at 34DE can be attributed to the fact that we simply had no one healthy on the roster who was a better fit at the time (in 2010). Perhaps if G. Warren (or even Deaderick or Love) had been better at DE, we might have seen Brace more at NT flanked by G. Warren and Wilfork. So, none of this necessarily means to me that he was ever intended to assume that role as a full time starter (or even primary reserve) for a period of years.
I'm a trickster a heart, when I'm not meditating on the beauty of the cardboard containing my illustrious mental capacity. In this case your "surmise" is no more or less then my own at the time, and for the same reasons. I merely point to fresher evidence from observers at TC and my own TV to suggest our paradigm is once again being Belichicked (for lack of a more applicable term). It's a good thing I like sly, eccentric head coaches.
I often substitute "diabolical".
Arrington at LDE against Manning.
You know Manning had to get at least a brief "WTF?!" moment out of that.
Might've made all the difference.
Based on potential, Heyward appears to have more talent then Brace. You perhaps could argue that these players have some similarities, Brace was a wide body getting by on size and talent who needed a full year of the Vince Wilfork Motivational Backside Kicking Academy to move beyond warm body and begin life as a football player. Heyward, from much of what I saw this season, was inconsistent, and only played to his potential in his bowl game when the sent of NFL cash was strongest. If NE thought another underachieving early second DL around Brace's #40 pick was a good candidate for the VWMBK Academy, I'm okay with the value range and the player targeted there. I don't see the guy anywhere in #17-#33 range for NE.
As for those claiming Brace was drafted to be a reserve NT, please quote BB and link to his quote to substantiate your claim. If we go back to reports on Brace from his rookie Training Camp, we have keen observers such as Patsfanken reporting Brace drilling at defensive end more often by far then NT. You may wish to argue this was cross-training, yet the miracle of our television screen often shows Brace at DE, and rarely at NT. I submit Brace was drafted to play on the D-line, with no predisposition to force him into NT or DE or 3-tech or 1-shade.
So how will Heyward be better than Brace? And vice-versa?
That's a pretty damning article about Heyward. It says, in effect, that he's leaving college without yet having developed any instincts for making plays. Given that his NFL pedigree might have anything given me a head start, that leaves me quite concerned about whether he'll get there in the pros.
I'm not a big fan of Ohio State players anyway, but I must admit that Mike Vrabel is a huge counterexample, and anyhow the last time I met any OSU players was 1976 (and one of those was Tim Fox).
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